Fed won't meet until September 16- 17th. You likely won't hear anything either way before then.
People who bail out on dips tend to lose money. They miss the recovery cycle where it goes back up and don't get back in again (if they do) until after a good run of gains (which means gains are tougher after that). If you want to invest in something, it should be more "buy and hold" unless you need the cash. Jumping around when things get tough eats into your returns. Dips are often better to be buying than selling. If you had bought in March, 2008 when the DOW had fallen to about 6500, you would have 1.6 times the money (160% gain). If you waited until 2010, DOW was around 10000 and you would have 70% more (less than half the return). If you bought gold in 2010, you would be just about even (zero percent gain).
Im going to buy this dip on Monday.
You do that.
We had a similar week last year.
Don’t be surprised if stock markets stabilize or bounce back in the next couple of days. Markets are due at least a short-term rally after this week’s dramatic plunge. This usually happens after a sell-off, no matter what the next big move is going to be. It doesn’t mean anything.
But anyone who automatically assumes this is another easy “buying opportunity” is talking nonsense.
For the past couple of years, Wall Street’s perma-bulls have had it their way. They’ve been gloating openly as stocks went up and up and up, seemingly without pause.
It got to the point that those warning about valuations and danger signs had been mocked into silence — or were simply ignored.
Not now.
We had a similar week last year.
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People who bail out on dips tend to lose money. They miss the recovery cycle where it goes back up and don't get back in again (if they do) until after a good run of gains (which means gains are tougher after that). If you want to invest in something, it should be more "buy and hold" unless you need the cash. Jumping around when things get tough eats into your returns. Dips are often better to be buying than selling. If you had bought in March, 2008 when the DOW had fallen to about 6500, you would have 1.6 times the money (160% gain). If you waited until 2010, DOW was around 10000 and you would have 70% more (less than half the return). If you bought gold in 2010, you would be just about even (zero percent gain).
My 401k is gonna take a beating....
Wondering if I should suspend my monthly allocation. I'm matched my first 3% by employer.
Put it into a money market account at least up to the amount that is matched by your employer,that part is free money.My 401k is gonna take a beating....
Wondering if I should suspend my monthly allocation. I'm matched my first 3% by employer.
Put it into a money market account at least up to the amount that is matched by your employer,that part is free money.
You will want cash to buy into the market at some point in the future.
[h=1]These Charts Show How Hard China Has Hit Global Markets[/h] The damage is everywhere
Trista Kelley Camila Russo
August 21, 2015 — 1:41 PM EDT
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Weak manufacturing data out of China was the latest bad news to wreak havoc in financial markets this week. The devaluation of the yuan last week sparked global growth concerns that hit almost every global asset class, finally reaching what had until now been a bastion of stability: the S&P 500
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European shares entered a correction while emerging-market stocks faced the biggest weekly drop in more than three years. Equities in Hong Kong, Indonesia, and Taiwan entered bear markets. And with the S&P 500's steepest decline in 18 months yesterday, its two-day loss is the worst since 2011. Investors are selling the biggest winners of 2015 -- including Netflix, Apple and Amazon.
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One currency investor calls it "a race to the bottom." First China, then Vietnam, then Kazakhstan removed their pegs, exacerbating a rout in emerging-market currencies to reach record lows. Malaysia’s ringgit weakened to a 17-year low, the worst developing-nation performance this month after Russia’s ruble. Colombia, where oil is the biggest export, also saw its peso weaken to an all-time low.
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The pain seems never-ending for commodities, hurt again by the weakest Chinese factory data since the global financial crisis. The Bloomberg Commodity Index slid to its lowest level since 2002, while oil had the longest run of weekly declines in almost 30 years. Copper, nickel, zinc, aluminum, tin and lead also fell. BlackRock estimates commodity industry ETFs have seen outflows for five straight months.
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Gold is among the sole bright spots, rallying the most in seven months this week as investors fled to safety. Driving the gold boom is the Fed's fear of stubbornly low inflation, and market watchers have taken note: They have now shifted their bets on a September rate rise to a date later in the year, or even early next year.
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The yen has been another haven asset, strengthening the most this week since December, while the dollar weakened against currencies of nations with the lowest borrowing costs.
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Speaking of havens, Treasuries posted their best week since March as demand for fixed income soared during the global selloff. Government debt from Australia to Britain also gained this week, driving the average yield on developed-nation bonds to a three-month low.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ts-show-how-hard-china-has-hit-global-markets
This is going to dig deep.
SPXU ftw![]()